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    Liebherr’s S1 Vision haul units: design and planning notes for mine engineers
    Mining
    7 months ago

    Liebherr’s S1 Vision haul units: design and planning notes for mine engineers

    S1 Vision GmbH, a Liebherr Group spin-off, is developing a new class of compact, autonomous, battery-electric transport vehicles aimed at mine haulage and industrial logistics. The concept focuses on smaller, self-balancing platforms with a low centre of gravity and four-wheel steering, designed to move independently of traditional haul roads and operate in tighter underground headings and plant corridors. For mine planners and materials handlers, the approach signals a shift towards modular fleets with lower axle loads, potentially reducing pavement thickness, ramp widths and ventilation demand compared with conventional diesel trucks.

    Pantoro visible gold at Norseman: brownfield mine design notes for planners
    Mining
    7 months ago

    Pantoro visible gold at Norseman: brownfield mine design notes for planners

    Pantoro Gold has reported visible gold in diamond drill core at its Norseman project in Western Australia, with intercepts from the Scotia and Maybell mining centres confirming high-grade mineralisation close to existing underground development. The company is targeting extensions to current ore reserves around the Scotia Mining Centre processing plant, which has a nameplate capacity of about 1 Mtpa, to support a longer mine life and higher mill utilisation. For geotechnical and mine planners, the results point to potential brownfield cutbacks and additional underground stopes rather than greenfield infrastructure.

    Caledonia’s Bilboes gold project: design and risk notes for open-pit planners
    Mining
    7 months ago

    Caledonia’s Bilboes gold project: design and risk notes for open-pit planners

    Caledonia Mining is advancing the Bilboes gold project in Zimbabwe after a positive feasibility study confirmed its potential to become the country’s largest single gold mine by production. The study supports a large-scale open-pit operation with a central processing plant, positioning Bilboes ahead of Caledonia’s existing Blanket Mine in planned output. For geotechnical and mine planning teams, the shift to a major greenfield open pit in Zimbabwe signals upcoming demand for large waste dumps, pit slope design under tropical weathering profiles, and grid-power-dependent processing infrastructure.

    Canada–India nuclear export deal: uranium demand outlook for mine planners
    Mining
    7 months ago

    Canada–India nuclear export deal: uranium demand outlook for mine planners

    Canada and India are reportedly negotiating a 10‑year nuclear export deal that would expand Canadian uranium and reactor technology sales into India’s growing nuclear power programme. The framework is expected to sit alongside existing supply from Cameco’s Cigar Lake and McArthur River operations and India’s planned fleet of 700 MW pressurised heavy water reactors. For miners and fuel-cycle suppliers, a long-term bilateral arrangement would give clearer demand visibility for yellowcake, conversion and fuel fabrication capacity.

    Highland Copper exits White Pine North: portfolio and capex implications for mine planners
    Mining
    7 months ago

    Highland Copper exits White Pine North: portfolio and capex implications for mine planners

    Highland Copper has agreed to sell its 66% interest in the White Pine North copper project in Michigan to Kinterra Copper USA for US$30 million in cash, plus a 1% NSR royalty. The company plans to use the proceeds to advance its nearby Copperwood project on the south shore of Lake Superior towards a construction decision, including detailed engineering, updated permitting and early site works. The exit concentrates Highland’s portfolio on Copperwood’s planned underground operation, simplifying capital allocation and project sequencing in the Upper Peninsula.

    UK 30% critical minerals by 2035: project and permitting signals for miners
    Policy
    7 months ago

    UK 30% critical minerals by 2035: project and permitting signals for miners

    The UK government plans to meet 30% of domestic demand for critical minerals such as lithium, cobalt and rare earth elements from UK sources by 2035 under a new 10‑year strategy. The plan mirrors US, Canadian and EU policies aimed at reducing reliance on China‑dominated supply chains for battery, wind turbine and electronics materials. For miners and processors, it signals stronger backing for domestic exploration, recycling capacity and mid‑stream refining projects, with permitting, ESG compliance and grid access likely to be key constraints.

    UBS copper price upgrade: project pipeline and offtake signals for mine planners
    Mining
    7 months ago

    UBS copper price upgrade: project pipeline and offtake signals for mine planners

    UBS has raised its 2026 copper price forecasts to $11,500/t for March, $12,000/t for June and $12,500/t for September on mounting supply concerns. The bank’s revised curve signals expectations of tighter concentrate availability and potential delays to new sulphide projects, with implications for long-term offtake contracts and smelter treatment charge negotiations. Miners and project developers may see stronger incentives to advance brownfield debottlenecking and higher-grade underground expansions to capture the forecast price uplift.

    Kimberley Process conflict diamond reform: ESG and due-diligence lens for projects
    Policy
    7 months ago

    Kimberley Process conflict diamond reform: ESG and due-diligence lens for projects

    Efforts to reform the Kimberley Process have stalled again after the World Diamond Council spent three years drafting a broader “conflict diamond” definition to include non-state armed groups and explicitly recognise artisanal and small-scale miners. The proposed wording aimed to move beyond the current focus on rebel movements against legitimate governments, addressing violence linked to private security forces, criminal gangs and abusive supply-chain intermediaries. Continued deadlock leaves producers, cutters and retailers operating under a narrow legal definition that diverges from NGO expectations and many downstream buyers’ ESG due-diligence standards.

    Endeavour Silver’s US$50M Bolañitos sale: asset and project lens for mine planners
    Mining
    7 months ago

    Endeavour Silver’s US$50M Bolañitos sale: asset and project lens for mine planners

    Endeavour Silver has agreed to sell its Bolañitos underground silver-gold mine in Guanajuato, Mexico, to Guanajuato Silver for US$50 million, adding a fifth operating asset to Guanajuato Silver’s Mexico-based portfolio. The deal consolidates control of the Guanajuato mining district for Guanajuato Silver, which already operates the El Cubo and Valenciana mines and nearby processing facilities. For Endeavour, divesting the Bolañitos operation frees capital for advancing its Terronera project and other higher-margin developments in its pipeline.

    Lithium’s next decade as an everyday metal: pricing and project economics for mine planners
    Mining
    7 months ago

    Lithium’s next decade as an everyday metal: pricing and project economics for mine planners

    Ukraine is closing applications on 12 December for its first lithium Production Sharing Agreement, covering the Shevchenkivske deposit in the Dnipropetrovsk region and targeting hard‑rock resources near existing iron ore and manganese operations. The op‑ed argues that lithium will shift from “white gold” pricing to an “everyday metal” cost structure as new brine, hard‑rock and clay projects ramp up globally and battery chemistries diversify beyond high‑nickel NMC. For mine planners and investors, the piece signals greater exposure to long‑term commodity‑style pricing, making project economics, opex per tonne LCE and downstream integration more critical than short‑term spot spikes.

    Nutrien’s US$1bn Longview potash terminal: logistics implications for Canadian ports
    Infrastructure
    7 months ago

    Nutrien’s US$1bn Longview potash terminal: logistics implications for Canadian ports

    Canada’s federal government has condemned Nutrien’s plan to build a US$1 billion potash export terminal at Longview, Washington, rather than expanding capacity at Canadian ports such as Vancouver or Prince Rupert. Ottawa argues the greenfield US terminal could divert millions of tonnes of Saskatchewan potash away from Canadian rail and port infrastructure, weakening domestic supply chains and associated dredging, berth and storage investments. The dispute signals heightened political scrutiny of cross-border logistics choices for bulk commodities and may affect future approvals for rail and terminal upgrades in Canada.

    Downing’s Anderston Quay Glasgow scheme: design and sustainability notes for engineers
    Infrastructure
    8 months ago

    Downing’s Anderston Quay Glasgow scheme: design and sustainability notes for engineers

    Downing has lodged plans for a 1,135-bed mixed-use scheme at 40 Anderston Quay on the River Clyde, comprising three blocks up to 29 storeys with a 3,700 sq ft ground-floor commercial unit on the former Daily Record and Sunday Mail site. Two blocks provide 551- and 282-bed PBSA towers (29 and 10 storeys), while a 13-storey block delivers 302 co-living studios, all with cycle storage, gyms, games rooms, study spaces and 24/7 management. A high-performance façade, air-source heat pumps and rooftop PVs target BREEAM Excellent, with red/white brick cladding and landscaped public realm and terraces to boost biodiversity.

    Robertson breaks ground at Crewe hospital: phasing and access lessons for engineers
    Infrastructure
    8 months ago

    Robertson breaks ground at Crewe hospital: phasing and access lessons for engineers

    Robertson Construction North West has broken ground on the first phase of Crewe’s new “health and care neighbourhood” for Mid Cheshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, initiating enabling works and primary infrastructure for the expanded hospital campus. The programme will deliver new clinical and support facilities integrated with existing Crewe Hospital buildings, requiring staged construction and service diversions on a live acute site. For civil and geotechnical teams, early works will focus on groundworks, utilities corridors and traffic management to maintain emergency access during phased development.

    Hazelhurst Farm housing scheme: infrastructure and land-use notes for project teams
    Infrastructure
    8 months ago

    Hazelhurst Farm housing scheme: infrastructure and land-use notes for project teams

    Farmland at Hazelhurst Farm in Worsley is set for a 330-home residential scheme after Story Homes and Taylor Wimpey exchanged contracts with Peel Land Group, with 155 units to be built by Story and 175 by Taylor Wimpey. The developers propose 50% affordable housing, though only 20% will be delivered on-site, alongside land safeguarded for a new primary school and 5 hectares of open space to satisfy biodiversity net gain. A Section 106 deal requires £15.3m in contributions to local infrastructure and amenities, with a planning application due to Salford City Council within weeks.

    BGF’s £15m backing for Cruden: pipeline and delivery insights for project teams
    Infrastructure
    8 months ago

    BGF’s £15m backing for Cruden: pipeline and delivery insights for project teams

    BGF has invested £15m in Edinburgh-based house-builder Cruden Group, which delivered £140m turnover last year and has a 4,500-home pipeline across Scotland’s Central Belt and other locations. The funding is intended to accelerate Cruden’s development programme by bringing forward sites from its landbank and supporting major schemes such as the 847-home Granton Waterfront project, due to start on Edinburgh’s largest brownfield site in 2026. The deal coincides with a leadership shift, with Cruden Homes MD Fraser Lynes becoming group CEO and former Persimmon regional chair John Cassie joining as non-executive chair.

    Winvic’s £74m Avonmouth M&S warehouse: design, groundworks and MEP notes for engineers
    Infrastructure
    8 months ago

    Winvic’s £74m Avonmouth M&S warehouse: design, groundworks and MEP notes for engineers

    Winvic Construction has secured a £74m contract from Stoford and Epta Development Corporation to build a 390,000 sq ft Marks & Spencer logistics facility at Plot 5, Axis Works in Avonmouth, due for completion by summer 2026 on a 20-year pre-let funded by LondonMetric. The scheme targets BREEAM Excellent and EPC A, with rainwater harvesting, roof-mounted PV, ASHPs, EV charging and RICS WLCA-based embodied carbon assessment. Technical features include 900 sqm of -18°C to -20°C freezer space, 20,000 sqm of +1°C to +3°C chillers, GEA monitoring, dual backup generators, three new drainage culverts, and ground improvement using prefabricated vertical drainpiles with a Menard piling solution.

    Deeley returns to profit: project pipeline and delivery lessons for contractors
    Infrastructure
    8 months ago

    Deeley returns to profit: project pipeline and delivery lessons for contractors

    Deeley Group has returned to profit with a £2.0m pre-tax gain on £67.0m turnover for the year to 30 April 2025, after two consecutive loss-making years, and is forecasting turnover above £100m driven by a strong later living pipeline. Recent schemes include a £36.9m specialist retirement community for Anchor in Sutton Coldfield, a £10.6m co-housing project for Housing 21 in Birmingham, and delivery of 554 extra care apartments plus 183 care home beds in 12 months. The contractor is also delivering a 500,000 sq ft manufacturing and logistics development near Gaydon and rolling out Procore and LEAN construction to improve programme and site coordination.

    McAvoy healthcare design appointment: modular NHS facilities lens for project teams
    Infrastructure
    8 months ago

    McAvoy healthcare design appointment: modular NHS facilities lens for project teams

    Offsite specialist McAvoy has appointed architect Matthew Usher as healthcare design manager to lead the design of modular clinical facilities for both rental and sale. Usher, formerly a project architect at Corstorphine & Wright with a healthcare-focused portfolio, will front health-related design from early engagement through to delivery, targeting faster programmes and adaptable layouts for NHS clients. The move follows McAvoy securing a place on the NHS Commercial Solutions Framework (Lot 2: modular & prefabricated building services) and reappointment to the NHS SBS modular building framework.

    Renew’s FY25 results and M&A shift: infrastructure takeaways for engineers
    Infrastructure
    8 months ago

    Renew’s FY25 results and M&A shift: infrastructure takeaways for engineers

    Engineering services group Renew has reported FY25 revenue up 5.6% to £1,116m, while profit before tax slipped 6% to £56.7m, with a record £915m year-end order book driven by long-term highways, rail, water and utility frameworks. The company has exited its legacy Walter Lilly building business and acquired Full Circle to move into onshore wind services, both transactions completing in October 2024. Chief executive Paul Scott added that the post-period acquisition of Emerald Power further extends Renew’s position as a pureplay engineering services provider in regulated and renewable infrastructure.

    Heathrow runway plan over Aurora: design, cost and M25 impacts for engineers
    Infrastructure
    8 months ago

    Heathrow runway plan over Aurora: design, cost and M25 impacts for engineers

    Government approval has gone to Heathrow Airport Limited’s £33bn northwest expansion, centred on a 3.5km third runway that requires realigning the M25 and placing a section beneath the new pavement, ahead of Arora Group’s 2.8km Heathrow West proposal. The HAL scheme includes £21bn for the runway and associated works, with £1.5bn earmarked for M25 diversion, plus £12bn for new terminal infrastructure and a separate £15bn programme to upgrade existing facilities. Government cites more mature surface access design, fewer residential acquisitions and better resilience for next‑generation aircraft as decisive factors.

    McHale to buy Marubeni-Komatsu: UK Komatsu distributor shift for project teams
    Infrastructure
    8 months ago

    McHale to buy Marubeni-Komatsu: UK Komatsu distributor shift for project teams

    McHale Plant Sales has agreed to acquire Redditch-based Marubeni-Komatsu Ltd and take over sole distribution of Komatsu construction and utility equipment across the UK, with completion targeted for 1 January 2026 subject to regulatory approval. Komatsu Europe will take a minority shareholding in McHale, which will trade as McHale Komatsu in the UK and retain all existing branches, warranties and maintenance contracts. Marubeni-Komatsu, UK Komatsu distributor since 1972, reported turnover down 22% to £167.4m and pre-tax profit down to £4.5m in the year to 31 March 2024.

    Perfect infrastructure clients: key lessons from senior leaders for engineers
    Infrastructure
    8 months ago

    Perfect infrastructure clients: key lessons from senior leaders for engineers

    Senior leaders from UK infrastructure contractors and consultants describe “perfect clients” as those who give early clarity on scope, risk allocation and budget, rather than driving lowest-price tenders under tight OPEX and CAPEX constraints. They point to clients who lock in requirements before RIBA Stage 3, share digital models and ground investigation data, and commit to NEC-style collaborative contracts as enabling better programme certainty and fewer design changes. For engineers, this behaviour supports realistic geotechnical risk pricing, leaner design iterations and more reliable whole-life asset performance.

    Amey’s call for Treasury-led infrastructure budget: key points for civil engineers
    Policy
    8 months ago

    Amey’s call for Treasury-led infrastructure budget: key points for civil engineers

    Amey is urging HM Treasury to centre the Autumn Budget on long-term infrastructure investment to drive productivity, economic resilience and progress towards net zero. The firm’s submission calls for committed funding pipelines for transport and utilities, giving contractors and designers confidence to plan multi-year programmes and optimise whole-life asset performance. For geotechnical and civil practitioners, a stronger, more predictable capital programme would influence ground investigation demand, design workloads and the timing of major renewals across highways and rail.

    Saturn Metals ramps up Apollo Hill drilling: pit design implications for engineers
    Mining
    8 months ago

    Saturn Metals ramps up Apollo Hill drilling: pit design implications for engineers

    Saturn Metals has mobilised additional reverse circulation rigs at its Apollo Hill gold project in Western Australia after reporting significant new gold intercepts from recent drilling. The campaign targets extensions to known mineralisation around the Apollo Hill deposit, using RC drilling to rapidly test shallow to moderate depths across multiple step-out and infill holes. For geotechs and mine planners, the expanded programme signals imminent updates to resource geometry, pit shell assumptions and geotechnical domains as fresh structural and lithological data come in.

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